Explore every episode of the podcast AWESOME ASTRONOMY
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chatting Space within tent | 01 Sep 2024 | 01:37:19 | |
A bit different this month as Paul is joined by Dustin as they chat about aurora on Ganymede, starliner, Polaris Dawn, Blue Origin and Dustin shares an interview at a local astronomy Festival. Produced by Paul, Jen, John, Damien & Dustin | |||
| British Planetary Science Conference | 21 Aug 2024 | 00:52:45 | |
In this podcast extra for Awesome Astronomy in August 2024, we bring you two of the Plenary Sessions from the British Planetary Science Conference 2024, hosted by Space Park Leicester and the National Space Center. The first, from Dr Aprajita Verma, discusses the upcoming Extremely Large Telescope (ELT), and the second, from Dr Steve Banham, gives you a new view of Mars Evolution, based on Curiosity's work at Gale Crater. Keep an ear out for activities to get involved with! | |||
| Wet Moons and Tippy landers | 01 Mar 2024 | 01:02:53 | |
This month our intrepid crew of the good ship Awesome investigate sub surface oceans on the moons of the solar system, smoking stars, distant blackholes, oversized structures and of course tippy over lunar landers. There is also the monthly skyguide and a look at the astro history of March! | |||
| Blasting Soil - Interview with Dr Phil Metzger | 17 Feb 2024 | 00:53:02 | |
This month Dr Jen talks to Dr Phil! Dr Phil Metzger, 30 years at NASA where he has worked on various missions and programmes including the ISS snd Space Shuttle, while more recently he has been investigating how rocket efflux interacts with soil and what this will mean for future landings on the Moon and Mars… | |||
| Awesome Astronomy Episode #140 | 02 Feb 2024 | 01:09:38 | |
This month we explore the exciting announcements from the European Space Agency as they outline their new missions for the 2030s. LISA, a space based gravitational wave detector and EnVision, a Venus mission that will map the surface and under-surface of that planet in unprecedented detail. We have the usual skyguide, chat about recent lunar missions and emails from the listeners. | |||
| #139 Awesome Astronomy January 2024 | 15 Jan 2024 | 01:13:35 | |
This episode, it's Jen and a special guest exploring the inexplicable Big Ring, the first proof connecting supernovae to black holes and neutron stars, cyclones on a far-away world, dazzling images of Io, and the true colour of Neptune. We also take a deep dive into humanity's efforts to explore the Moon – the failing Peregrine lander and Artemis pushbacks. There's also a sky guide for the second half of January, and our discussion topic this time involves a most impossible restaurant. Produced by Paul, Jen, Dustin, John & Damien.
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| Awesome Astronomy Panto and Review of the Year 2023! | 26 Dec 2023 | 01:09:09 | |
Festive silliness (bit naughty!), a review of the Space and astronomy year and a look ahead to what 2024 has in store for us. Not forgetting the outakes! | |||
| #138 Awesome Astronomy December 2023 Pt1 | 01 Dec 2023 | 01:15:05 | |
This month we explore what might have happened to the Planet Theia after it hit the Earth, what Lucy saw on its first asteroid encounter, the mystery of a new double crater on the Moon and what the first images from the Elucid telescope show. We have our monthly skyguide, launch round up and emails and questions from listeners. Produced by Paul, Jen, John, Damien & Dustin | |||
| Astronomy Mythology of Wales | 19 Nov 2023 | 00:45:49 | |
This month Jeni talks to Paul. No not our Paul Paul Cornish, planetarium and science outreach extraordinaire at Bristols We the Curious. They chat about one of our favourite topics on Awesome, constellation Mythology and this time it has a very Welsh flavour...enjoy! | |||
| #137 November 2023 Awesome Astronomy | 01 Nov 2023 | 01:11:09 | |
This month we talk about what might have been in the Arthur C Clarke Awards, the latest weird discovery from JWST, the most detailed simulation of the Universe yet, British space plans, giggle at a Space Force painting, and have a look at what you can see in the sky this month.
Produced by Paul, Jen, John, Damien & Dustin | |||
| The AstroCamp Panel! | 19 Oct 2023 | 01:00:49 | |
This month we give you a recording of our live panel show from AstroCamp, held in September. The team answer questions and comments from the public about a range of space and astronomy topics. | |||
| #136 - October 2023 Awesome Astronomy | 01 Oct 2023 | 01:18:02 | |
This month Paul and Dr Jen talk about the recent astrocamp where yet more Aurora was seen. Later there is a guide to seeing Aurora at lower latitudes. JWST is at it again with a possible detection of biological signals on an exoplanet, AND breaking and rewriting galaxy morphology history. There is an autumnal sky guide and the low down on the Bennu return mission OSIRIS-REx.
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| Comet Olbers in Silly Season | 01 Aug 2024 | 01:08:01 | |
This month the team talk Comet Olbers, black holes in globular Clusters, the cancellation of Vixen, the ultra calm lakes of Titan, more phosphine news from Venus and look forward to this months Perseids. Produced by Ralph, Paul, Jen, John, Damien & Dustin | |||
| JWST looks at the Ring - Interview with Dr Roger Wessen | 17 Sep 2023 | 00:45:47 | |
This months interview looks at that stunning imagery that JWST took of the Ring Nebula - that familiar Messier planterary nebula in Lyra and favourite of star parties. This new study has revealed new and unexpected details and once again demonstrated the brilliant science of our golden wonder telescope in space. Dr Jeni talks to Dr Robert Wessen, Research Associate at Cardiff University who has worked on the Ring Nebula data, about what astronomers have revealed as well as talking about his career and life astronomy. He also exclusively reveals what is going to happen next in this area of study. Enjoy! | |||
| #135 - September 2023 Awesome Astronomy | 01 Sep 2023 | 01:29:24 | |
This month we are joined by special guest Neill Sanders from Go Stargazing who is making a special announcement about astronomy cruise Holidays. We have news of a new type of star, mud on Mars and JWST breaking cosmology once again. After our skyguide we chat about the recent Indian and Russian moon missions. In our discussion topic we have a Battle of the Planets as we decide which should get in the bin, Saturn or Jupiter. | |||
| #134 August 2023 Pt2 Awesome Astronomy | 16 Aug 2023 | 00:53:46 | |
For this podcast extra, we return to NAM 2023, this year held at Cardiff University. We're delighted to bring you the conversational style of Dr Stephen Wilkins, public engagement extraordinaire. Dr Stephen is an STFC Public Engagement Fellow (so you know this talk will be just brilliant) and serves as a Director of Outreach and Public Engagement for the School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences at the University of Sussex. This episode, we have the Tale of Two Telescopes, exploring NASA's new flagship James Webb Space Telescope, and ESA's pioneering Euclid, set to uncover the Dark Universe. Enjoy! Produced by Paul, Jen, John, Damien & Dustin | |||
| #134 - August 2023 Awesome Astronomy | 01 Aug 2023 | 01:21:50 | |
This month we have a packed show, with stories about the European space agency launching a new space telescope to study The Dark Universe. India going to the moon with Chandrayaan-3, astereroid boulders, a key ingredient for life just 1 billion years into the Universe's history, measuring a crater with highway seismology, hot lava piles on the moon, and a farewell to Ariane 5. We discuss observing meteor showers in our monthly skyguide and we ask the important question- where would you let superman take you in the solar system? | |||
| How to grow a supermassive black hole with Dr Becky Smethurst | 18 Jul 2023 | 00:48:06 | |
Once a year, astronomers descend upon an unsuspecting UK city in the greatest gathering of astronomically curious minds: the National Astronomy Meeting, otherwise known as NAM (no, not that 'Nam, though it is quite the battle of the minds). Jen was lucky enough to attend this year and this episode is the first in a series of talks recorded at NAM 2023. We're delighted to bring you the expertise of none other than Dr Becky Smethurst of Oxford University (you may know her as Dr Becky on Youtube). In this talk, Dr Becky teaches us how to grow a supermassive black hole – and it's not as easy as you think! Always picture a black hole as a gigantic hoover, sucking up everything that dares to stray too close? Think again… | |||
| #133 Awesome Astronomy July 2023 | 01 Jul 2023 | 01:02:47 | |
It's a summer vacation special with Jeni in the mountains of South America astronomising at altitude and visiting the Vera C Rubin telescope as well as obstech.
We have an interview with a Vera Rubin Observatory astronomer as well as a skyguide and an astronomy news round up. | |||
| Interview with Dr Kathy Thornton | 15 Jun 2023 | 00:20:51 | |
We chat to Dr Kathy Thornton, nuclear physicist turned NASA astronaut who went on to fly on four Space Shuttle missions. Dr Thornton flew for over 40 days and completed over 21 hours of EVA, including the famous operation to fix the blurry Hubble Space Telescope. We talk about her life as an astronaut, the Hubble fix and that fateful day in mission-control on Columbia's last re-entry. | |||
| #132 - June 2023 Awesome Astronomy | 01 Jun 2023 | 01:22:30 | |
This month Jeni and Paul talk about the recent supernova in galaxy M101; volcanic exoplanets; the growing observational evidence putting the current Big Bang theory under strain and the history of water on both Earth and Mars. There is discussions on alien contact; exoplanet detection and how long it would take to accelerate to the speed of light. Paul does a summer reading book review with three space books to keep you entertained on the beach this summer. Jeni has a look at the Juice mission, Axiom 2, future space station plans and a round up of launches. This months skyguide includes discussion noctilucent clouds and deep sky in the centre of our galaxy. | |||
| Skylab 50 - Interview with Astronaut Jack Lousma | 14 May 2023 | 00:48:00 | |
To celebrate the Skylab 50th anniversary here is one our favourite astronaut chats from 2012 where we caught up with Skylab 3 and STS-3 astronaut, Jack Lousma. Jack was also capcom during Apollo 13 and he tells us about taking that ominous 'Houston, we've had a problem' call and how they solved each life-threatening issue in sequence to get the astronauts back alive. He talks about missing out on flying Apollo 20 to the moon, being a crew member on the Skylab space station and taking one of the first space shuttles out for a test drive. | |||
| #131 - May 2023 Awesome Astronomy | 01 May 2023 | 01:20:04 | |
This month Paul and Jeni in astronomy news talk about new data on the M87 blackhole, the architecture of planetary systems, the hottest stars, an impact crater in France and how Mars might not have been oxygen rich. In exploration news there is the latest on JUICE and they welcome an old friend back to the show to talk about Starship. There is a review of the recent AstroCamp where the team witnessed one of the biggest geomagnetic storms of recent times and saw one of the most impressive Auroral displays while standing on a Welsh mountain. | |||
| Sanctuary on the Moon | 14 Jul 2024 | 00:44:55 | |
Celebrating 55 years since humans first set foot on the Moon with Project Apollo, in this podcast extra, Dr Jen meets with Benoit Faiveley and Mario Freese, founder and chief engineer of Sanctuary on the Moon, a daring project to leave a legacy of humanity on our nearest celestial neighbour. In the late 2020s, 24 coaster-sized sapphire disks will sail to the Moon as part of NASA's Artemis CLPS program. Engraved upon them will be the essence of humanity. One hundred billion pixels depicting the human genome, the work of masters, and the every day - one pixel for every human that ever lived. It is an exploration of ourselves, our world, and our epoch.
Produced by Ralph, Paul, Jen, John, Damien & Dustin | |||
| Interview with Joshua Western CEO of Space Forge | 15 Apr 2023 | 00:27:20 | |
Jeni visits Space Forge for an update on their mission to build reusable satellites to manufacture materials that that are impossible on the ground. She talks to CEO Joshua Western about that fateful launch from Cornwall on Virgin's Cosmic Girl, how they are getting ready for their next test aboard a Falcon 9, their re-entry tech nicknamed 'Mary Poppins in Space' and the company's future plans to scale up the manufacturing process from grams to tons!
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| #130 - April 2023 Awesome Astronomy | 01 Apr 2023 | 01:12:44 | |
In this episode Jeni and Paul talk about exoplanet atmospheres, the latest thinking on solar system visitor Oumuamua, Vigin Orbit's woes, Relativity's 3D success, and the oldest orbiting satellite. There is the sky guide for April, a discussion about what new telescope Jeni should buy and listener emails, as well as Paul's miserable weather and Jeni's gala dinner talk for International Women's Day. | |||
| Interview with Solar Astronomer Professor Robert Walsh | 15 Mar 2023 | 00:26:06 | |
Paul takes time out from outreach at the Festival of Tomorrow at the Swindon STEAM museum to chat with Professor Robert Walsh of the University of Central Lancashire, who with artist Alex Rinsler has created a giant representation of the Sun as an outreach and art project that uses the data of the Solar Dynamics Observatory. They talk about solar science, the coronal heating problem, sounding rockets, space missions professor Walsh has been involved with, space weather and why he has his own Sun. | |||
| #129 - March 2023 Awesome Astronomy | 01 Mar 2023 | 01:05:53 | |
In this episode Jeni tells us about her TEDx talk, dressing up for Mama Mia and eating insane burgers, while Paul appears to have started a modelling career. In astronomy news the team explore the latest JWST findings that may have broken cosmology and changed everything we thought we knew about the history of the universe, as well as a potential new explanation for dark energy and black holes. There is the sky-guide looking at the highlights for March as well as the Messier marathon, while in spaceflight news it is all change on the ISS, Boeing may finally be getting its act together and Starship may be going to orbit. Emails and questions complete a packed show | |||
| Interview with Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell | 15 Feb 2023 | 00:39:38 | |
Interview with astronomer Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell Jeni talks to the legendary discoverer of pulsars, champion of women in science and Oxford University astronomer about her astronomy career, inspirations, motivations and key discoveries.
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| #128 - February 2023 | 01 Feb 2023 | 01:02:55 | |
The Discussion:
The News: Rounding up the astronomy news in February, we have:
The big news story: a decade-long study finds light pollution is worse than we thought
The Sky Guide: This month we're taking a look at the large winter constellation of Ursa Major with a guide to its history, how to find it, a few deep sky objects to seek out and a round-up of the solar system views on offer in February.
Q&A: Does the James Webb Space Telescope have to take calibration frames like I do from Earth - darks, flats, and bias frames to then stack? From our good friend Peter Coates in East Yorkshire. | |||
| Interview with Chris Lee | 15 Jan 2023 | 00:48:43 | |
Bringing back the much-missed Awesome Astronomy interviews with a bang, we're joined by friend of the show Chris Lee.
Chris began his career in the 80s in the UK space industry at British Aerospace, Matra Marconi and SCISYS where he worked on the Hubble Space Telescope, the Giotto mission to Halley's Comet, Beagle 2, Exomars and LISA Pathfinder.
He then became the UK Space Agency's first Head of International Space Policy and then Head of Space Science Programmes before becoming Chief Scientist at the UK Space Agency.
Now retired, he's a keen amateur astronomer with Bristol Astronomical Society, an astroimager and listener to the show that we've been wanting to record a chat with for quite a while. | |||
| #127 - January 2023 | 01 Jan 2023 | 01:16:34 | |
The Discussion:
The News: Rounding up the astronomy news in November, we have:
The big news story: As the UK gets ready to launch space vehicles for the first time, we take a look at the long history of UK space activity and the concept of launching to space from aircraft.
The Sky Guide: As many people will have got new observing equipment this Christmas, we're taking a look at the beginner-friendly constellation of Taurus with a guide to its history, how to find it, a few deep sky objects to seek out and a round-up of the solar system views on offer in January.
Q&A: The brightest GRB ever recorded occurred on 9th October 2022. Its effects on the Earth's ionosphere was strong enough to be observed by amateur radio astronomers. How did dust form the expanding halo observed around the GRB source? From our good friend Andrew Thomas. | |||
| End of Year Show | 24 Dec 2022 | 00:54:35 | |
*** Beware, stiff profanity (phnar phnar) in the outtakes at the end ***
Our Christmas Pantomime sees the Awesome Astronomy crew exploring strange new worlds on the Astronomy Star Ship (ASS) Penetrator.
Between the puerile skits you've come to expect from our end of year shows, we bring you a roundup of the best astronomy and space exploration news from 2022. And, of course, a look forward to the highlights to come in 2023.
To all our listeners, a very merry Christmas, happy holidays and a prosperous 2023 (download or die!). | |||
| #126 - December 2022 | 01 Dec 2022 | 01:07:44 | |
The Discussion:
The News: Rounding up the astronomy news in November, we have:
The big news story: What else? Artemis 1 launches to make NASA's return to the moon a reality.
The Sky Guide: This month we're taking a look at the winter constellation of Perseus with a guide to its history, how to find it, a few deep sky objects to seek out and a round-up of the solar system views on offer in December.
Q&A: Does the x-ray end of the electromagnetic spectrum have Fraunhofer lines like the visual part? And if not, how is x-ray spectroscopy done? From our good friend Graeme Durden, who we all wish the very best as he continues his radiotherapy treatment.
For all listeners that are male and over 50 or have a dad, brother, husband, partner or friend who is male and over 50, please do take a few seconds to assess your prostate cancer risk at: prostatecanceruk.org/risk-checker | |||
| Starliner Marooned and Playing Gyros! | 02 Jul 2024 | 01:11:58 | |
This month the team discuss keeping the elderly Hubble alive with a single gyro, how Starliner is currently marooned in orbit and are usually round up of other news from the cosmos, a skyguide for what to look out for and a this month in astronomy history that explores the life of Henrietta Swan-Leavitt. | |||
| #125 - November 2022 Part 1 | 01 Nov 2022 | 00:53:10 | |
The Discussion:
And listeners' emails on:
The News: Rounding up the astronomy news in November, we have:
The big news story: Hipparchus' star charts found buried in early Christian parchments
The Sky Guide: This month we're taking a look at the winter constellation of Andromeda with a guide to its history, how to find it, a few deep sky objects to seek out and a round-up of the solar system views on offer in November.
Q&A: What are the wispy striated filaments visible in the JWST images of the Carina Cliffs? From our good friend Rachel Kronick | |||
| Rendlesham Forest Incident | 15 Oct 2022 | 00:59:09 | |
Christmas 1980. Suffolk, England. Two US airmen witness what they believe is an aircraft coming down in the forest next to their base. So begins the story of the UKs most notorious UFO sighting, the Rendlesham Forest incident. Paul dives head first into a 'Hat of Woo' special as he explores the mysterious forest of Rendlesham on the Suffolk coast and considers what this famous conspiracy story says about time and place and of course what really happened. | |||
| #124 - October 2022 Part 1 | 01 Oct 2022 | 01:09:50 | |
Jeni and Paul talk to Professor Mike Edmunds, President of the Royal Astronomical Society and Emeritus Professor of astrophysics at Cardiff University, who is also Dr Jeni's academic grandfather....
Paul gives a quick look at the sky highlights for October and then Jeni, John and Paul host an open panel discussion at AstroCamp where the audience talk about where space begins, JWST, the worth of Artemis and how the infamous Elephant Trunk nebulae incident happened... | |||
| #123 - September 2022 Part 2 | 13 Sep 2022 | 01:12:22 | |
The Discussion:
The News:
Skyguide: As we're a little late in the month for a September skyguide, this is a quick guide to the astronomy events to observe over the next few months. Pay attention because there's some great oppositions, occultations, eclipses, meteor showers and possibly even a couple of naked eye comets!
Q&A: | |||
| #123 - September 2022 Part 1 | 01 Sep 2022 | 00:03:23 | |
Hear ye! Hear ye!
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| #122 - August 2022 Part 2 | 15 Aug 2022 | 00:56:33 | |
The Discussion:
The News:
The news discussion: Loads of news around the International Space Station
Q&A: | |||
| #122 - August 2022 Part 1 | 01 Aug 2022 | 01:19:23 | |
The Discussion: The release of JWST's first images, the press conferences and media coverage. Emails on astrophotography, Dr Jen's TV appearances and a more politically correct alternative name for JWST.
The News: Rounding up the astronomy news in August, we have:
The big news story: What else? It's JWST innit?
The Sky Guide: This month we're taking a look at the summer constellation of Cygnus with a guide to its history, how to find it, a couple of deep sky objects and a round-up of the solar system views on offer in August.
Q&A: No time for Q&A – we've got JWST to prattle on about! | |||
| #121 - July 2022 Part 2 | 15 Jul 2022 | 01:02:39 | |
The Discussion:
The News:
The news discussion: NASA's CAPSTONE mission to lunar orbit
Q&A: | |||
| #121 - July 2022 Part 1 | 01 Jul 2022 | 00:58:43 | |
The Discussion:
The News: Rounding up the astronomy news in April, we have:
The big news story: A big boost in the search for life in the universe
The Sky Guide: This month we're taking a look at the constellation of Serpens with a guide to its history, how to find it, a couple of deep sky objects and a round-up of the solar system views on offer in July.
Q&A: Will a black hole always look like a donut whichever direction you observe it from? From our good friend Mitch Sevier, presumed to be in the United States. | |||
| #120 - June 2022 Part 2 | 14 Jun 2022 | 01:06:36 | |
The Discussion:
The News:
The news discussion: NASA to formally investigate UFOs – is this wise?
Q&A: | |||
| Aurora at Home | 01 Jun 2024 | 01:03:56 | |
This month is indulgent and ranty! Well it is summer...Jen waxes lyrical about a night out, Paul has written a book and in amongst it is some astronomy! There is a big dive into the huge aurora display in May, talk of new exoplanets and old ones vanishing. The usual skyguide and this months history moment is all about X rays. Produced by Paul, Jen, John, Damien & Dustin | |||
| #120 - June 2022 Part 1 | 31 May 2022 | 01:17:29 | |
The Discussion:
The News: Rounding up the astronomy news in April, we have:
The big news story: Only an image of the black hole region at the centre of our galaxy!
The Sky Guide: This month we're taking a look at the constellation of Draco with a guide to its history, how to find it, a couple of deep sky objects and a round-up of the solar system views on offer in June.
Q&A: What sites and activities could you recommend for disabled amateur astronomers? From our good friend Ash in Wales. | |||
| #119 - May 2022 Part 2 | 15 May 2022 | 01:08:37 | |
The Discussion:
The News:
The news discussion: The ongoing saga of Boeing's Starliner spaceship
Q&A: | |||
| #119 - May 2022 Part 1 | 01 May 2022 | 01:18:36 | |
The Discussion:
The News: Rounding up the astronomy news in April, we have:
The big news story: the Planetary Science Decadal Survey is out!
The Sky Guide: This month we're taking a look at the constellation of Ursa Major with a guide to its history, how to find it, a couple of deep sky objects and a round-up of the solar system views on offer in May.
Q&A: Will JWST be able to confirm the existence of the Ort Cloud? From our good friend Oren Wyche in Maryland USA. | |||
| #118 - April 2022 Part 2 | 14 Apr 2022 | 01:08:23 | |
Also check out our YouTube channel here for much more astronomy and spacey goodness: https://www.youtube.com/awesomeastronomy?sub_confirmation=1 The Discussion:
The News:
The news discussion: The Axiom-1 mission to the International Space Station
Nebulas: | |||